A Swedish photographer who in 1978 was given a staged tour
of the Khmer Rouge’s communist utopia will return to Cambodia
for the first time Saturday, in part to exhibit the photographs he took on the
trip and in part to apologize for missing the truth.

As part of the Swedish Cambodian Friendship Association,
Gunnar Bergstrom spent 14 days in Cambodia in August 1978, where he was given a public
relations tour by top leaders of the regime, including Pol Pot and Ieng Sary.

He visited factories and rice fields in Phnom
Penh and the countryside and walked away believing Cambodia’s
economy was showing promise, that the communist agrarian experiment was working. Only
later did he learn of the nearly 2 million who died under the regime.

Bergstrom will return Saturday to begin a two-week tour “to
speak with over 400 commune chiefs and villagers,” the Documentation Center of
Cambodia, which is supporting the exhibit, said in a statement. “He will tell
Cambodians—and ultimately the world—about the things he saw, ignored, and was
never shown during his first visit.”

Bergstrom will be visiting a post-war Cambodia where some
the regime leaders who hosted him are in jail under the Khmer Rouge tribunal,
awaiting trials for atrocity crimes. The first, for jailed prison chief Duch, is expected in early 2009.

The 93-photograph exhibit, “Gunnar in the Living Hell,” features
“never-before-seen photographs taken exclusively from Bergstrom's personal archive of his 1978 tour,” the Documentation Center said. “They are in color—unusual
for pictures taken in Democratic Kampuchea.”

The exhibit will open at Reyum Arts Gallery and the Khmer
Rouge tribunal building in Phnom Penh
Nov. 18, before traveling to the provinces of Kampong Cham, Takeo and
Battambang later in the month. Finally, the exhibit will be permanently
displayed at the Tuol Sleng Genocide
Museum, with a duplicate exhibition
shown in Stockholm, Sweden.

“The Khmer Rouge prepared [the visit] for him, so he could
tell his people what he saw,” said Kalyanee Mam, a public affairs officer for
the Documentation
Center. “He was shown
factories, and he visited a hospital and schools, but those were only an ideal
picture that they had organized for him. He could not see behind the scenes.”

“What he saw was busy activity, and that made him think that
Cambodia
was developing its economy,” she said. “But later, he knew that nearly 2
million were killed in Pol Pot’s regime, and then he felt so guilty. He wanted
to present his apology to everyone, because he did not know the truth.... He
strongly supports the Khmer Rouge tribunal.”

“As with most visual documents produced for the Khmer Rouge,
Bergstrom's collection includes no photos of the torture, starvation, death,
and despair for which the Khmer Rouge is so reviled,” the Documentation Center
said. “These omissions beg the questions: Was there any justification for the
Swedes' support of the Khmer Rouge? Did the Khmer Rouge cadres filter what the
Swedes saw, or were the Swedes willfully blind to the conditions surrounding
them? Were the Swedes hapless bystanders—or were they, too, victims of the
Khmer Rouge,
manipulated and duped by the regime?”